----- Original Message -----
From: "J. King" <mtknight@dark-phantasy.com>
To: "Andrew Fedoniouk" <news@terrainformatica.com>
Cc: "www-style" <www-style@w3.org>
Sent: Sunday, June 26, 2005 6:41 AM
Subject: Re: [CSS21] Please endorse xml:id
|
| On Sun, 26 Jun 2005 01:22:51 -0400, Andrew Fedoniouk
| <news@terrainformatica.com> wrote:
|
| > CSS also asumes that this DOM represents "endless tape" coming
| > incrementally.
| > Consequence: famous vertical alignment.
|
| I hadn't considered that one.
|
| > CSS asumes that this DOM is always placed in some view having known
| > dimensions and capable to set flags :hover
| > :active :focus :link , etc. to its elements.
|
| Can you demonstrate a case where one would want to (or, for that matter
| could) render content onto a canvas of -unknown- dimensions?
To be precise in CSS 2.1 canvas defined as
"The canvas is infinite for each dimension of the space,
but rendering generally occurs within a finite region of the canvas...
viewport..."
(http://www.w3.org/TR/CSS21/intro.html#canvas)
And real example:
In application http://www.evernote.com/en/products/evernote/
each note is HTML document. EverNote canvas (The Tape) has unlimited
vertical dimension. In some cases it has also
unlimited width. Therefore e.g. root { width:100%; height:100% }
is not applicable.
|
| Interactive pseudo-classes aren't limited to HTML or XML, especially since
| they aren't even reflective of the document tree. I suppose :link -was-
| specified with HTML in mind, but UAs for document types that don't have
| links can still be interoperable in every other respect---and
| interoperable with each other in every way.
|
| I think you're just splitting hairs here, Andrew. The conformance
:) Yes, it seems so.
| requirements do state that lack of a feature in a UA due to technical
| limitations of a platform does not make it non-conformant. Granted, they
| don't say anything about limitations of the document type, but that seems
| the implication. Perhaps they should state this explicitly, though?
Andrew Fedoniouk.
http://terrainformatica.com